When the jurisdiction of this Court is invoked for the
protection, against the final judgment of the highest court of a
state, of some title, right, privilege or immunity secured by the
Constitution or laws of the United States, it must appear expressly
or by necessary intendment from the record that such right, title,
privilege or immunity was specially "set up or claimed" under such
Constitution or laws, as the jurisdiction of this Court cannot
arise in such case from inference, but only from averments so
distinct and positive as to place it beyond question that the party
bringing the case up intended to assert a federal right.
Motion to dismiss. The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Attorney General of Illinois filed in the Supreme Court of
Illinois at its June term, 1897, an original petition against
Joseph Kipley, Superintendent of Police of the City of Chicago, and
Adolph Kraus, Dudley Winston, and Hempstead Washburne,
commissioners appointed under the act of the Legislature of
Illinois in force on and after March 20, 1895, entitled "An act to
regulate the civil service of cities."
The application for leave to file the petition was accompanied
by a suggestion upon the part of the Attorney General that the case
involved an interpretation of the above act.
The prayer of the petition was that a writ of mandamus issue,
commanding Kipley, as Superintendent of Police of Chicago, to
notify the civil service commissioners of all vacancies existing in
the positions of assistant superintendent of police, inspectors of
police, and captains of police in the City of Chicago, and
commanding the civil service commissioners to submit to Kipley, as
superintendent of police, the names of not more than three
applicants for promotion for each vacancy from the grade next below
that in which such vacancy or vacancies exist, and that the
petitioner have such other or further relief as the nature of the
case required.
Kipley filed a separate answer in which he insisted that he had
acted in all respects in conformity with law. He also averred that
although the act regulating the civil service of cities was passed
and approved substantially as stated in the petition, and was
afterwards submitted to a vote of the electors of Chicago and
adopted by a large majority of votes, it was "unconstitutional and
void" in that it purported to confer judicial powers and authority
to make and enforce judgments and decisions of a nonjudicial body,
described and set forth in the act as the "Civil Service
Commission."
Subsequently, June 28, 1897, the City Council of Chicago passed
an ordinance designating certain public officers who should be
selected by the mayor with the concurrence of the council. Kipley,
July 10, 1897, filed a plea setting forth this ordinance and
alleging, in relation to the appointment by the civil service
commissioners of certain subordinate police officers of the city,
that they
"have been, if they ever were within the same, wholly taken away
from and removed out of the control, jurisdiction, and power of the
said civil service commissioners, so that such matters are now
expressly excepted by its very terms from the force and effect of
said Civil Service Act."
On the 7th day of October, 1897, Kipley asked leave of the
Page 170 U. S. 184
court to withdraw his plea and also to amend his answer so as to
embody therein averments to the effect that the relator was not
entitled to a writ of mandamus, and that the court had no
jurisdiction or power to grant the same because the said Civil
Service Act of March 20, 1895, was null and void, and contrary to
the Constitution of the State of Illinois and the Constitution of
the United States, in that:
"1. It abridges the privileges and immunities of the citizens of
the United States because it operates to exclude from the
classified service of such city, as therein specified, all such
citizens as do not apply for office, or for place of
employment."
"2. The said Act of March 20, 1895, deprives a duly elected and
qualified officer of the right to select his subordinates and
provide the requisite agencies for performing his official duties,
thus abridging the rights, privileges, and immunities belonging and
guarantied by the said constitutions, respectively, to every
citizen thereof."
"3. The said Act of March 20, 1895, provides for the invasion of
the right of the people to be secure, in their persons, houses,
papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and
seizures."
"4. The said Act of March 20, 1895, purports to prescribe for
the criminal trial of public officers for nonfeasance, for
misfeasance, for malfeasance in office, and for the infliction of
penalties therefor, of deprivation of office, of fine, of
imprisonment, and incapacity to hold office thereafter, by a
nonjudicial body, and in such manner that the accused shall not
enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury
of the state or district wherein the crime shall have been
committed, and without informing the accused of the nature and
cause of the accusation, and without confronting the accused with
the witnesses against him, and without permitting the accused to
have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and
to have the assistance of counsel for the defense."
"5. That the said act denies to the citizens the freedom of
political action, making it highly penal for the citizen to take
part in party politics. "
Page 170 U. S. 185
"6. That said Act of March 20, 1895, provides for the creation
and maintenance of an office-holding class at the expense of the
people who are excluded therefrom by the operation of the said
act."
"7. And generally said Act of March 20, 1895, is directly in
contravention of the right of that clause of the United States
Constitution which prescribes that"
"all persons born or naturalized in the United States and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United
States and of the state wherein they reside. No state shall make or
enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges and immunities
of citizens of the United States, nor shall any state deprive any
person of life, liberty or property without due process of law, nor
deny to any person the equal protection of the laws."
"8. And further, the said Act of March 20, 1895, generally
denominated the 'Civil Service Act,' is absolutely null and void
because the same purports to require the civil officers of the City
of Chicago to undergo tests as to qualification for office and
public employment in addition to the requirement of section 25 of
article 5 of said Constitution of the State of Illinois, and
because it provides for a political test for the said commissioners
respectively therein named, and because further the same is in
contravention of section 22 of article 4 of said Constitution, as
well as many other provisions of said state constitution."
Kipley also asked leave to file "a supplemental mental answer,"
averring that, since the filing of his original answer, the city
council had passed the above ordinance of June 28, 1897.
The motions for leave to withdraw the plea, to amend the answer,
and to file a supplemental answer were severally denied.
On a subsequent day of the term, Kipley entered a motion to
discharge the rule requiring the respondents to answer the petition
and to quash all the proceedings that had been taken, assigning as
reason therefor that the Civil Service Act of March 20, 1895, was
contrary to the Constitution of Illinois and the Constitution of
the United States upon certain specified grounds. They were the
same as those specified in the
Page 170 U. S. 186
above motion for leave to amend the answer. That motion was also
denied.
On the 22d day of December, 1897, the Supreme Court of Illinois
rendered its final judgment, granting the relief asked in the
petition for mandamus.
The final order of the court was that a writ of mandamus issue,
commanding Kipley, Superintendent of Police of Chicago, to notify
the civil service commissioners of all vacancies existing in the
positions of assistant superintendent of police, inspectors of
police, and captains of police in that city, and the civil service
commissioners to submit to him, as such superintendent of police,
the names of not more than three applicants for promotion for each
vacancy from the next grade below that in which such vacancy or
vacancies existed.
Kipley, having given previous notice thereof, filed a petition
for rehearing on the 8th day of January, 1898, but before that
petition was disposed of, he sued out a writ of error to this
Court. That constitutes case No. 586. The rehearing having been
denied, he sued out another writ of error, and that constitutes
case No. 601. The citation in each case was signed by the chief
justice of the state court. The cases, on motion, were consolidated
in this Court, and are before us on a motion to dismiss each writ
of error for want of jurisdiction.
We are of opinion that this Court is without jurisdiction to
review the final judgment of the Supreme Court of Illinois in these
cases. The answer makes no reference whatever to the Constitution
or laws of the United States. It is true that it avers that the
Illinois Civil Service Act was "unconstitutional and void." But
when the jurisdiction of this Court is invoked for the protection,
against the final judgment of the highest court of a state, of some
title, right, privilege, or immunity secured by the Constitution or
laws of the United States, it must appear expressly or by necessary
intendment from the record that such right, title, privilege, or
immunity was "specially set up or claimed" under such constitution
or laws. Rev.Stat. p. 709. Our jurisdiction cannot arise in such
case from inference, but only from averments so distinct and
positive as to place it beyond question that the party bringing
Page 170 U. S. 187
the case up intended to assert a federal right.
Oxley Stave
Co. v. Butler County, 166 U. S. 648;
Levy v. Superior Court of San Francisco, 167 U.
S. 175,
167 U. S. 177.
The averment in the answer that the statute of Illinois was
unconstitutional and void must be taken as intended to apply to the
constitution of that state, and not to the Constitution of the
United States. In
Miller v. Cornwall Railroad,
168 U. S. 131,
168 U. S. 134,
this Court, speaking by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, said:
"We have no jurisdiction on a writ of error to a state court to
declare a state law void on account of its collision with a state
constitution, and it was long ago held that where it was objected
in the state courts that an act of the state was 'unconstitutional
and void,' the objection was properly construed in those courts as
raising the question whether the state legislature had the power,
under the state constitution, to pass the act, and not as having
reference to any repugnance to the Constitution of the United
States.
Porter v Foley, 24 How.
415."
It is manifest that when the answer was drawn, neither the
defendant Kipley nor the learned counsel representing him intended
to raise any question of a federal nature. We cannot suppose that
it occurred to either of them at that time that the Civil Service
Act of Illinois was repugnant to the Constitution of the United
States.
Nor was any question of a federal character raised or intended
to be raised by the plea which brought before the court the city
ordinance of June 28, 1897.
It is, however, said that the motion for leave to amend the
answer did specially set up and claim that the Illinois Civil
Service Act violated certain rights, privileges, and immunities
belonging to the plaintiff in error under the Constitution of the
United States. But as the Supreme Court of Illinois did not allow
the proposed amendment of the answer, the questions suggested by
the amendment did not arise for determination. To the action of the
court in disallowing the amendment, no exception was taken. The
grounds upon which these motions were denied appear from the
opinion of the court as follows:
"By this motion respondent, Kipley, asks, first for leave to
withdraw his plea, second to file an amended answer, and
Page 170 U. S. 188
third to file a supplemental answer. Nothing more is before us
than the bare motion. No showing has been made, nor reasons filed,
in support of the motion, and we are unable to say whether the
motion should be allowed or not, and it must therefore be
overruled."
People v. Kipley, 167 Ill. 638. This action of the
state court does not raise a federal question which this Court can
examine. The suggestion that the federal questions which would have
been raised if the answer had been amended as proposed should be
considered upon their merits, precisely as they might have been if
the motion to amend had been allowed, cannot be entertained for a
moment. It was in the discretion of the court to deny the motion to
amend when no reasons were assigned for its allowance, and to hold
the parties to the issues made by the original petition and answer,
and there is nothing in the record justifying the conclusion that
its discretion in that regard was exercised with the intent or so
as to deprive the defendant either of any right or immunity to
which he was entitled under the Constitution or laws of the United
States, or of the privilege of setting up or claiming in due time,
and in proper form, any such right or immunity.
It may be observed that the opinion of the state court delivered
upon final hearing contains nothing to show that any federal
question was considered or determined. The general subject to which
the attention of the court was directed is shown by the following
extract from its opinion, delivered by Mr. Justice Magruder:
"The evils sought to be remedied by legislation of this
character are well known and well understood. These evils are such
as grow out of what is generally called the 'spoils system.' . . .
The foundation principles of the act are that appointments to
municipal offices or employments must be made according to merit
and fitness, to be ascertained by competitive examinations, free to
all, and that promotions from lower to higher grades in the public
service must be made upon the basis of merit."
People v. Kipley, 171 Ill. 44, 93. The validity of the
enactment in question was considered by that court with reference
only to the state constitution.
Page 170 U. S. 189
In respect of the motion to discharge the rule and all
proceedings against the respondents, it need only be said that it
could have been denied upon the ground that the questions sought to
be raised by it might more properly arise upon demurrer, plea, or
answer. Its denial did not have the effect to bring any federal
question into the record to be determined. It may also be observed
that no exception was taken to the action of the state court in
relation to this motion.
This Court having no jurisdiction to reexamine the final
judgments of the state court in these cases, the motion to dismiss
the writs of error is sustained.
Dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE dissents.